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elkhound

Awesome Friend
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Dec 11, 2017
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Barsoom
do you have it in you if you had literally nothing and had to start over in whats the most harsh site on the planet...solid rock? this woman was about totally broke and had a need for her daily shelter..a.ka. a home/land...she bought what she had the money to buy..its 600 meters of rock pile...thats 0.15acres.you can see her little home was built from the very stone on site and its walkways.this is very much do what ya can with what you have and best you can daily survival. first video is from about a year ago..it has inset picture of what site looked like in sept 2017...the second video is her talking and showing what she has accomplished as of may 2019.


 
may 2019



from video description....


Some months ago, Geoff took us on a tour of a neighbour’s garden ( https://youtu.be/ITph5GJoKbA), and now the Green the Desert crew has returned to check the project. Even better, they are being guided by the property’s owner and permaculture designer. Meet Abla, the former school teacher who bought a small piece of property in the desert. After nine months on the property, she met her neighbours Geoff and Nadia, and she took the permaculture course at the Greening the Desert site. She began transitioning her own property, which had been mostly rocks and barren soil, into a green desert site as well. Having left the city unhealthy, she has felt renewed with a permaculture lifestyle, caring for plants and keeping herself busy. She is producing her own food and no longer has to go to the city for supplies. She’s collecting eggs from chickens. She’s making compost. She’s got a worm farm and uses the juice, as well as gets rid of diseased plants and collects castings. She’s got sugarcane, dates and vegetables. She’s planting nitrogen-fixers in compost to build up the soil. She’s got olives, mangoes, spinach, tomato, and potato. She’s got several moringa trees, figs, and flowers. Herbs, mint, and cabbage are growing at ground level. Jasmine and other vines are growing up to provide shade in the future. She has bees and the promise of honey. She’s been working for one year and four months and has transformed the property. To protect her soil from washing away, Alba has piled the rocks from her site into a “gabion” along a side that takes water during rains. Creeping plants covering slopes to prevent erosion within the gardens. She’s catching water from her rooftop, harvesting five tanks’ worth over the winter. This all started from a small, shady spot at the side of her house, a place she used as a nursery. Now, she looks out at the desert from her lush property and sees the potential to correct the mistakes we’ve made.
 
What I am not sure of is, did she build her house? She has done amazing work developing her property in a short amount of time. Any of us may be in a situation where we may be trying to make a shelter or home from what materials are found where we are. We may have a home now. We have no idea what the future brings: fire, earthquake, hurricane, tornado, war. All the plastic that is currently polluting our planet can be used somehow to create what we need in the future.
 
I looked at that house and figured it was professionally built. That is a great house for the area, bullet resistant in a war prone area, fire resistant, bug resistant, as the sun beats on the house all day it slowly soaks into the inner wall where it warms the house in the cool night. If it's not that cool at night, that would explain the shade plants.
 
I looked at that house and figured it was professionally built. That is a great house for the area, bullet resistant in a war prone area, fire resistant, bug resistant, as the sun beats on the house all day it slowly soaks into the inner wall where it warms the house in the cool night. If it's not that cool at night, that would explain the shade plants.

He said they were in Jordan. Deserts get cold at night. We can have a 50°-60° drop over night in my desert.
 

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